Fantasy Football Mock Draft: 2QB League (2026)

This will be my first fantasy football mock draft of the year, and we are starting off 1/2 point PPR in a 2 QB League. Below, I will walk you through my picks and what my thought process was. Check out the full draft board here.

Fantasy Football Mock Draft: 2QB League

1.03 – Lamar Jackson (QB – BAL)

This is a no-brainer. In a 2QB league, leaving Round 1 with a top-tier quarterback is essential—especially drafting in the front half. Jackson gives you elite dual-threat upside and a weekly ceiling that few players can match.

2.10 – Justin Jefferson (WR – MIN)

This is where roster construction becomes preference-based. You could go QB2, RB1, or grab an elite WR.

With Patrick Mahomes, Caleb Williams, and Jaxson Dart still on the board, none stood out enough at this spot. That made it an easy decision between Jefferson and Amon-Ra St. Brown.

The addition of Kyler Murray at QB gives Jefferson the edge. If the Vikings were still rolling with J.J. McCarthy, I likely go in a different direction.

3.03 – Drake London (WR – ATL)

Sticking with the “best playmaker available” approach here. It came down to London vs. De’Von Achane, but locking in a high-volume WR felt like the better move while still holding off on QB2.

4.10 – Derrick Henry (RB – BAL)

Wanted to address RB, and Henry falling here made too much sense. It also creates a Ravens mini-stack with Lamar Jackson. When Baltimore gets into the red zone, it’s almost always one of these two finishing drives.

5.03 – Bucky Irving (RB – TB)

This feels like a steal. With names like Kyren Williams, Travis Etienne, and Javonte Williams on the board, Irving stands out as a tier above in both upside and situation.

6.10 – Ladd McConkey (WR – LAC)

This is where QB2 started to come into play, and in hindsight, Baker Mayfield probably should’ve been the pick. Instead, I went McConkey for value.

7.03 – C.J. Stroud (QB – HOU)

Ideally, I wanted a QB with more rushing upside, but Stroud still offers a strong bounce-back profile. If he returns closer to his rookie-year form, this becomes a very solid QB2.

If Mayfield makes it back, he’s the clear choice over Stroud, for me.

8.10 – Sam LaPorta (TE – DET)

Yes, 2025 was disappointing, but LaPorta still has elite upside at the position. I don’t think he should be going behind guys like Harold Fannin, Tyler Warren, or Tucker Kraft. Expect a bounce-back year for him and the Lions offense.

9.03 – Chuba Hubbard (RB – CAR)

Solid depth piece at RB with volume potential.

10.10 – Cam Ward (QB – TEN)

I really like how Ward closed his rookie year—8 TDs to just 1 INT over his final four starts. With a full offseason under his belt, he has sneaky upside.

11.03 – Chris Godwin (WR – TB)

Godwin steps into the WR1 role with Mike Evans gone. Even with Emeka Egbuka in the mix, Godwin should command consistent volume as Baker Mayfield’s top target.

12.10 – Sean Tucker (RB – TB)

Solid handcuff to Bucky Irving with goal line potential.

13.03 – Kyle Pitts (TE – ATL)

As a Browns fan, I know how much Kevin Stefanski includes his tight ends. If Pitts finally delivers on his breakout potential, this could be one of the steals of the draft.

14.10 – Brandon Aubrey (K – DAL)

15.03 – Xavier Worthy (WR – KC)

He’s not a true WR1, but with Rashee Rice back, defenses can’t key in on him. That should open up more explosive opportunities for Worthy.

16.10 – Baltimore Ravens D/ST

17.03 – Mark Andrews (TE – BAL)

A third TE isn’t ideal, but Andrews still has chemistry with Lamar. With Isaiah Likely no longer a factor, there’s a path back to relevance—and it completes the Ravens stack.


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